Satna

Satna
सतना
Satna

Location in Madhya Pradesh, India

Coordinates: 24°10′N 80°50′E / 24.16°N 80.83°E / 24.16; 80.83Coordinates: 24°10′N 80°50′E / 24.16°N 80.83°E / 24.16; 80.83
Country  India
State Madhya Pradesh
Region Baghelkhand
District Satna
Government
  Type Mayor–Council
  Body Satna Municipal Corporation
  Mayor Mamta Pandey[1]
  District Collector Shri Naresh Kumar Pal[2]
  Member of Parliament Ganesh Singh[3]
Area
  Total 7 km2 (3 sq mi)
Elevation 415 m (1,362 ft)
Population (2011)
  Total 283,004
Languages
  Official {{{demographics1_info1}}}
  Local Bagheli
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
PIN 485001
Telephone 07672
Vehicle registration MP-19-XXXX
Website satna.nic.in

Satna is a city in the Satna District (सतना) of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, which shares a border with neighboring Uttar Pradesh. The city is a municipal corporation within the district, and the home of its administrative headquarters.

History

Recent History

The Satna District is part of the region of Bagelkhand, a large part of which was ruled by the state of Rewa. A small part of Satna was ruled by feudatory chiefs, holding their states under the British Raj. Satna's name comes from the Satna River (or Sutna) which originates at Sarang Ashram (Sutikshna Ashram), situated near Sarangpur village in the Panna district. Previously, Sutna was the name of the railway station, the town being Raghurajnagar, but gradually the name of the station became associated with the city that is now Satna.

During the Ramayana Era, Lord Rama stayed in the region of Chitrakoot, half of which is in the outskirts of Satna, the other in Uttar Pradesh.

Once a British headquarters, the Baghelkhand Agency was established in Satna in 1872 (and abolished in 1931). Col. D.W.K. Barr prepared plans to develop Satna during the years 1882–88 and Sir Donald Robertson supervised construction of roads and other amenities according to those plans in 1888–94.

From antiquity to the mutiny of 1857

At nearby Bharhut are the remains of a 2nd-century BC Buddhist stupa, first discovered in 1873 by renowned archaeologist Alexander Cunningham; most of the finds from this site were sent to the Indian Museum.

The Mahabharata associates this site with rulers of the Haihaya, Kalchuri or Chedi clans.

The chiefs of Rewash, descended from Baghel Rajputs (who were in turn descended from the Solanki), ruled over Gujrat from the tenth to the thirteenth century. Vyaghra Deo, brother of the ruler of Gujrat, is said to have made his way into northern India about the middle of the thirteenth century and obtained the fort of Marpha, 18 miles north-east of Kalinjar.

His son Karandeo married a Kalchuri (Haihaya) princess of Mandla and received in Dowry the fort of Bandhavgarh (now in the tehsil of the same name in Shahdoldistrict), which, until its destruction in 1597 by Akbar, was the Baghel Capital. In 1298, Ulugh Khan, acting under order of the emperor Aladdin, drove the last Baghel ruler of Gujrat out of his country. This is believed to have caused a considerable migration of the Baghels to Bandhavgarh.

From then until the 15th century, the Baghels of Bandhavgarh were engaged in extending their possessions and so they escaped the attention of the Delhi kings. In 1498-99, Sikandar Lodi failed in his attempt to take the fort of Bandhavgarh.

The Baghel King Ramchandra (1555–92) was a contemporary of Akbar. Tansen, the great musician, was in the court of Ramchandra and from there Akbar summoned him to his court. After the death of Birdhabra, Ramchandra's son, Vikramaditya acceded to the throne of Bandhogarh as a minor, giving rise to civic disturbances. Akbar intervened and captured and dismantled the Bandhogarh fort in 1597 after an eight-month siege. From this point the town of Rewa, said to have been founded by Raja Vikramaditya in 1618, started to gain importance.

Following the Treaty of Bassein the British made an overture of alliance to the ruler of Rewa, but the latter rejected them. In 1812, during the time of Raja Jaisingh (1809–35), a body of Pindaris raided Mirzapur from Rewa territory. As a result, Jaisingh was called upon to accede to a treaty, in which he acknowledged the protection of the British Government, and agreed to refer all disputes with neighboring chiefs to their arbitration and to allow British troops to march through, or be cannoned within, his territories.

During the mutiny of 1857, Maharaja Raghuraj Singh helped the British in quelling the uprisings in the neighboring Mandla and Jabalpur district, and in Nagod which is now a part of Satna district. For his part the king was rewarded by restoration of the Sohagpur (Shahdol) and Amarkantak parganas, which had been seized by the Marathas in the beginning of the century .

Rulers of Rewa bore the title of "His Highness" and "Maharaja" and received 17 gun salutes.

Most of the Raghuraj Nagar and entire Amarpatan tehsil of the present Satna district were in the Rewa State prior to the formation of Vindhya Pradesh.

Nagod State

See also: Nagod

Until the 18th century, the state was known as Unchahara from the name of its original capital. The chiefs of Nagod were Parihar, Rajputs belonging traditionally to Mount Abu.

In the seventh century, Parihar Rajputs drove out the Gaharwar rulers and established themselves in the country between Mahoba and Mau. In the ninth century, they were repulsed eastwards by the Chandels, where Raja Dhara Singh seized the fort of Naro from the Teli Rajas in 1344. In 1478 Raja Bhoj obtained Unchahara, which he made the chief town. It remained so until 1720, when the capital was moved to Nagod by Raja Chainsingh. Later, the Parihars lost all their territories to the Baghels and Bundelas except the limited territory that they held before 1947.

Following the treaty of Bassein in 1820, Nagod was held to be a tributary to Panna and was included in the sanad granted to that state in 1807. In 1809, however, a separate sanad was granted to Lal Sheshraj Singh confirming him in his possessions.

For his loyalty during the 1857 mutiny, Chief Raghvendra Singh was rewarded by the British who granted him eleven villages, which had formerly belonged to the confiscated state of Bijeraghogarh.

Nagod chiefs had the title of Raja and received a 9 gun salute.

Maihar State

See also: Maihar

Maihar State was a princely state in India during the British Raj. The state had an area of 1,050 square kilometers (407 sq mi), and a population of 63,702 in 1901. The state, which included the Tons River, consists mainly of alluvial soil covering sandstone, and is fertile except in the hilly district of the south. A large area was forested, and lumber provided a small export trade.

The state was founded in 1778 by Rajput of the Kachwaha clan, who were granted land by the ruler of the nearby state of Orchha. From 1788 to 1790 Maihar State was occupied by Banda. The state became a princely state of British India in the early 19th century, and was administered as part of Bundelkhand Agency in the Central India Agency. In 1871 the eastern states of Bundelkhand Agency, including Maihar, were separated to form the new Bagelkhand Agency in Central India. In 1933 Maihar, along with ten other states in western Bagelkhand, were transferred back to the Bundelkhand Agency.

The state suffered severely from famine in 1896–1897. Maihar became a station on the East Indian Railway (now the West Central Railway) line between Satna and Jabalpur, 156 kilometers (97 mi) north of Jabalpur. Extensive ruins of shrines and other buildings surround the town. As of 1940 it had a population of 79,558 and an area of 412 square miles. In 1948 Maihar was merged into India.

Kothi State

See also: Kothi, Satna

Kothi State was a princely state of the British Raj. It belonged to the Bagelkhand Agency of Central India. Its capital was at Kothi, in modern Satna district of Madhya Pradesh. It was a relatively small Sanad state of about 438 km2 with a population of 19,112 inhabitants in 1901. The state's territory divided neighbouring Sohawal State in two parts.[4] Kothi State was founded at an uncertain date by a Rajput ruler who expelled the former Bharr ruler of the area.

Towards the beginning of the nineteenth century, and in much the same manner as neighboring Sohawal, Kothi became a British protectorate initially subordinate to Panna State. However, a separate sanad was granted to Rais Lal Duniyapati Singh in 1810. The last ruler of Kothi signed the instrument of accession to the Indian Union on 1 January 1950.

Sohawal State

Sohawal State was a princely state of the Bagelkhand Agency of the British Raj. It was a relatively small sanad state of about 552 km2 with a population of 32,216 inhabitants in 1901. Its capital was at Sohawal, a small town —2,108 inhabitants in 1901— located in modern Satna district of Madhya Pradesh.

The state was divided in two sections separated by territory belonging to Kothi State and, on its northern side, it formed little enclave within neighbouring Panna State.

Sohawal State was founded in the mid sixteenth century by a ruler named Fateh Singh. It had originally been much larger, but lost significant territory within the first centuries of its existence.

Sohawal became a British protectorate initially subordinate to Panna State, but a separate sanad was granted to Rais Aman Singh in 1809. During the 1830 - 1833 period there was an interregnum in which Sohawal came under direct British administration.[2] The last ruler of Sohawal signed the instrument of accession to the Indian Union on 1 January 1950.

Other states were: Baraundha, Chaubey Jagir.

Geography

Satna is located at 24°20′N 80°33′E / 24.34°N 80.55°E / 24.34; 80.55 with an average elevation of 317 meters (1033 feet).[5] The location is renowned for dolomite mines and limestone.

Description Satna Madhya Pradesh Remark
Geographical Area 742432 Hectare / 7502 km2 308,252 km2 2.4% of Total Area

Demographics

As of 2001 India census,[6] Satna had a population of 225,468. Males constitute 53% of the population and females 47%. Satna has an average literacy rate of 64%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 76%, and female literacy is 54%. In Satna, 15% of the population is under 6 years of age.

Language and people

Bagheli is the town's most commonly spoken language. Some people speak Hindi in this region. Other less common spoken languages include: Sindhi, Punjabi, and Hindi. Satna is the 7th most populated city in Madhya Pradesh.

Industries

Satna is in the limestone belts of India. As a result, it contributes around 8%–9% of India's total cement production. There is an abundance of dolomite and limestone in the area and the city has ten cement factories producing and exporting cement to other parts of the country. The electrical cable company Universal Cables in Satna is among the pioneers in the country. The city of Satna is known as the commercial capital of Baghelkhand. The city is among the few most promising cities of Madhya Pradesh because of the several new industries planned by some of the reputed industrial houses in the country. The city has witnessed a sharp growth in the post-liberalization era (after 1993). Major problems faced by the city may include, inter alia: inadequate electricity, poor road conditions, and air pollution from atmospheric wastes of cement factories. Satna is known as the cement city of India.[7]

Transport

Air

Satna has an airstrip called Satna Airstrip, built in 1970.[8] The nearest major airport to Satna is Jabalpur Airport which is approximately 200 kilometers from the city.[9] Another airport, which is 124 kilometers from Satna is Civil Aerodrome Khajuraho, which is in Chhatarpur District (Khajuraho Town).[10]

Railways

Satna Junction[11] railway station (IRCTC code STA) is a station in the Western-Central railway division on the route between Jabalpur Junction and Allahabad. It is a junction and the branch goes to Rewa. The railway station has three platforms with all up going trains normally using platform number 1 and all down going (trains heading towards Allahabad-Manikpur) using platforms 2 and 3. Satna is well connected by train to a few major cities in the country. It lies on the Howrah–Allahabad–Mumbai line, a train route connecting Mumbai and Howrah. There is also a diesel depot for the Western Central Railway. Satna Junction is the one of Jabalpur Railway division's junctions. It contributes a great deal of income becuse of the high volume of loading and unloading of cement, petroleum etc. All trains passing Satna Junction stop here. Threed of them have technical stoppage while the rest have commercial stoppage.

Roadways

Bus services connect Satna with various cities of Madhya Pradesh and some cities of Uttar Pradesh. The city is well-connected by state highways and a national highway. Satna is connected to the longest National Highway: NH-7. State highway NH-75 passes from the heart of Satna and connects it to cities of Panna and Rewa, which are other important cities of northern Madhya Pradesh.

Education

Satna has a literacy rate of 63.8% according to the 2011 Census;[12] however, this does not mean that Satna has quality educational institutes. There is no central university. India's first, little known, rural university[13] in Chitrakoot Mahatma Gandhi Chitrakoot Gramoday Vishwavidyalaya was established in 1991. It is one of sixteen state government universities in Madhya Pradesh. There are several degree colleges with large campuses in Satna. Awdhesh Pratap Singh University(APSU,Rewa) located in Rewa provides affiliations to the colleges in the city. The city is an educational hub of the Vindhya region and several courses such as Engineering, Biotechnology, Computer, Management, and Journalism are offered by institutes here.

Polytechnic College is a technical college. It has a special branch of Cement Technology.[14]

Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, run by HRD Ministry of India, is a center of education in Satna for those who come from an underprivileged or low-income background. Located at Rahikwara, this school has produced many talented engineers, journalists, and lawyers.

Government Universities

Private Universities

Government Colleges

Private Engineering Colleges

Private Colleges

Government Schools

Schools

Hospitals

Some of the hospitals serving the medical needs of people in Satna are:

Tourism

Satna district has some major religious tourism spots including Chitrakoot and Maihar. Satna district is close to an ancient city of Buddhist culture named Bharhut, whose archaeological remains are displayed in many museums in India and all over the world. In order to enlighten the glory of images of Bharhut Stupa, Bharhut Art Gallery(BharhutArtGallery,Satna), has been established within walking distance to the north of Satna Bus Station. The gallery is embellished with hundreds of photographs, replicas, epigraphs showing the social and historical importance of the monument. Tulsi Museum at Ramvan, 16 km from the city, has many unique local artistic sculptures of ancient times. Gaibinath Lord Shiva temple at Birsinghpur-semariya is a famous and old temple in the region. Madhavgarh Fort, about 7 km from Satna Railway station (Rewa Road), is another place to visit around Satna. Gidhakoot (Gidhaila) Parvat, Laxminarayan Mandir, Bada Mandir (under construction) of New Deorajnagar are also tourist sites.

Pannilal Chowk is one of the most crowded parts of the city, but is worth visiting as it has a number of shops and other stores for shopping as well as restaurants. The red stone Lord VenkatRaman Temple, in Mukhtyaganj is a famous temple visited by devotees and tourists alike. The nearby village of Bamhori, via Jaitwar, has two prominent temples: Hanumanji Temple and also Nandi Temple visited by devotees year round. There is one old world heritage ram-temple in village of Chormari.

Sports

Cricket is the most popular sport played and followed by many in Satna. There are three main stadiums:

Notable people

Temples

Satna is famous for its scenic temples. One of those temples, Venktesh Mandir, is near Mukhtyarganj. It was constructed between 1876 and 1925 by the royal family of Deorajnagar. Shri Bihari Mandir, in the heart of Satna. It was built by a great devotee of God Krishna, Mahant Brindavan Das, in the 1880s. Bihari Mandir has been a cultural center of Satna for over one hundred years as it organizes a very famous Ramleela which is revered by the locals. The 116th celebration to place in 2013. Dali Baba is a very ancient place of worship in Satna. It is said to have been established in 1857 by Abdaldas Baba. A Jain temple was constructed in 1880 and another Jain temple of Lord Shantinath in Somchand-Dharsi Ghar-derasar near 1889 and Pranami Mandir in 1890.

A temple which is more than 450 years old is ,Satyanarayan Temple.

A new temple named Pashupati Nath was built recently on the outskirts of town. There are temples of Saibaba, located at Dhawari and Sindhi colony where hundreds of people gather every Thursday for worship. One other famous temple is Shiv Temple on the banks of the Jagatdev Talab, a man-made water reservoir. Around Satna Khajuraho, Ramvan, Chitrakoot are world-famous temples. There is a Maa Sharda in Maihar which is a subdivision of Satna. There is a big Hanuman statue near Ramvan 16 km from Satna on Rewa road. In Sohawal (7 km away from Satna railway station) a famous Ram Jaanki Mandir called Chhota Sthan was built by the royal family of Sohawal State. Shri Raghuvir Mandir at Badi Gufa is situated on the banks of the holy Mandakini River in Jankikund, Chitrakoot. The temple is devoted to Lord Ram-Sita and also to the holy saint Pujya Ranchoddas Ji Maharaj who was the founder of Shri Sadguru Seva Sangh Trust and Sadguru Netra Chikitsalaya, which is known across the nation for its world class eye care facilities and service to humanity.

The Hanuman Ji Temple also has a big Shiva Linga in Bamhori, near Jaitwar (C.R) was constructed in 1962. The 14 month-long Kirtan was also carried out along with daily Bhandara during Pranpratistha of the deities in the Hanumanji Temple in Bamhori.

See also

References

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